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Alexander Rey
MARTINEZ
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Money discussion
- Robbery
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
August 12,
2001
Date
of arrest:
August 23,
2001
Date of birth: June
16,
1976
Victim profile: Helen Joyce
Oliveros, 45(prostitute)
Method of murder: Stabbing
with knife
Location: Harris County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on June 7,
2005
Summary:
Only out of prison for 3 weeks following his parole on a seven year
Attempted Murder sentence, Martinez called Helen Joyce Oliveros, a
prostitute, and made arrangements for her to meet him at his house
for $300.
Upon arrival, Oliveros and Martinez argued about the amount and
whether he was going to pay. When it became clear that Martinez
either had no money or was not going to pay her, an angry Oliveros
started to leave, but Martinez stuck a knife against her neck and
attempted to have sex with her.
Oliveros struggled and Martinez slashed her throat, causing her
death. He then took $150 from her.
Two days later, Oliveros’ nude body was found stuffed inside two
garbage bags in a Houston field.
Two weeks later, Martinez slashed his stepmother's throat in an
unprovoked attack, but she survived.
Martinez was arrested later the same day and admitted both slashings.
When police searched Martinez's bedroom the next day, they found
blood on the bed frame, wall, floor, closet shelves and door. Some
of the blood was from Oliveros.
Martinez later had the following tattooed on his arm: "RIP, August
12, 2001, $300, Helen Joyce Oliveros. In 2004, Martinez waived all
further appeals.
Final Meal:
A cheeseburger, scrambled eggs, mashed potatoes with gravy, bacon,
orange juice, fried steak, a fried pork chop, onion rings, french
fries, a quarter fried chicken and a bowl of shredded cheese.
Final Words:
In a statement while strapped to the death chamber gurney, he
thanked his family and friends and expressed his love for them. "And
thanks for the friends at the Polunsky Unit that helped me get
through this that didn't agree with my decision and still gave me
their friendship." In a handwritten statement he prepared about two
hours before his death, Martinez acknowledged that "I have caused so
much pain to so many people. I especially want to apologize to my
victim's family for the life I took. I am only taking full
responsibility for what I have done. I am truly sorry and, though
some may not believe this, God only knows the truth and for that I
know that's all that matters. I am ashamed for what I've done!"
Texas Attorney General Media
Advisory
MEDIA ADVISORY
Tuesday, May 31, 2005 -
Alexander Martinez Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about Alexander Martinez, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. June 7. In August 2001,
Martinez sexually assaulted, robbed and fatally stabbed 45-year-old
Helen Joyce Oliveros. In December 2002, Martinez was convicted of
capital murder in Oliveros’ death in Houston. Though Martinez had
not exhausted his appeals, he voluntarily forfeited them.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
Alexander Martinez called Helen Joyce Oliveros, a
prostitute, and made arrangements for her to meet him at his house
on Aug. 12, 2001. Martinez told the victim on the phone that he
would pay around $300.00 for her services.
On arriving at Martinez’s house, Oliveros began discussing payment.
Martinez argued about the amount and whether he was going to pay.
When it became clear that Martinez either had no money or was not
going to pay her, a then angry Oliveros stated that she was going to
leave, and began packing her things.
Martinez stuck a knife against her neck and pushed her back. He
began to attempt to have sex with her while holding the knife
against her neck. The victim kicked Martinez away but he managed to
grab her and prevent her from leaving. He then sliced her throat,
causing her death. Martinez took $150 from the victim.
On August 23, 2001, Oliveros’ nude body was found stuffed inside two
garbage bags in a Houston field.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On October 11, 2002, a Harris County grand jury
indicted Martinez for the capital murder of Helen Joyce Oliveros. On
December 16, 2002, a Harris County jury returned a guilty verdict,
and the trial court sentenced Martinez to death. On March 3, 2004,
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Martinez’s conviction
and death sentence . Martinez did not appeal the decision to the
Supreme Court.
On February 27, 2004, Martinez applied for state
habeas relief. On August 10, 2004, a competency hearing was held in
state court regarding Martinez’s desire to forfeit his appeals.
Martinez was found competent, and the convicting court dismissed his
state habeas petition. The trial court set an execution date of
March 10, 2005. On March 2, 2005, the trial court rescheduled
Martinez’s execution for June 7, 2005. On April 13, 2005, the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed Alexander’s state writ petition.
CRIMINAL BACKGROUND
On August 9, 1994, Martinez was convicted of
attempted murder.
Killer's 1-word creed: violence
Fearing he'll
kill again, dreading a prison life, Alex Martinez is ready to be
executed
By Allan Turner - Houston Chronicle
June 4, 2005
LIVINGSTON - The blue prison tattoos on Alex
Martinez's arms and torso, as intense in imagery as anything on the
ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, tell the story of his life. Somewhere,
surely, are references to his wretched childhood, the endless
beatings and psychological abuse.
But it's the tombstones, macabre
tributes to the women whose throats he slashed, that are most
chilling. "Maria," reads one, referring to Maria Martinez, the
stepmother who miraculously survived his brutal attack in August
2001. "To be continued."
The second cuts to the heart of what brought the
28-year-old one-time Houston fast-food worker to death row. Beneath
the inscription, "RIP," are a date, a woman's name and the sum,
"$300." Seemingly cryptic, the tattoo is a crude ink-and-skin
memorial to South Houston prostitute Helen Joyce Oliveros, who, on
Aug. 12, 2001, was murdered by Martinez during a squabble over her
fee.
Martinez admitted that the slashings, just weeks
after he was freed from prison where he served a sentence for
attempted murder, might seem extreme responses to minor provocations
— unless one believes in violence. "Yeah, I believe in violence,"
said Martinez, who is scheduled to be executed Tuesday and become
the ninth killer to die in the state's Huntsville death house this
year. "I was raised up with violence. I was hit, kicked, hollered at.
It destroyed my family. Even in here (prison) I'm subject to
violence. Even the state will be violent when I'm killed."
Partly out of fear that he will kill again,
partly out of dread of spending his life behind bars, Martinez said
in a recent death row interview that he wants to die. To the
consternation of his appeals attorney, Houston lawyer Pat McCann,
the killer has insisted that all efforts to save his life be halted.
"I think Alexander's life still has value," he said. "I wish he
would change his mind."
McCann thinks a key element of the prosecution's
case — testimony by his client's Harris County cellmate, Cesar Rios
— is faulty. "This is a case that never should have been a capital
case to start with," McCann said. "A lying jailhouse snitch was one
of the key elements in making a murder case a capital case. ... If
Alexander dies, he'd be dying for a lie. That's not justice."
In rejecting Martinez's initial, automatic appeal
in March 2004, however, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals found
that other evidence was "consistent with and corroborated" Rios'
testimony. Evidence also supported the accuracy of three confessions
Martinez gave investigators after his arrest. "He's one of the
scariest people I've encountered across the table," said Assistant
District Attorney Tammy Thomas, lead Harris County prosecutor in the
case. "He seems to enjoy the kill. That's pretty apparent from the
trial transcript. He's not sorry."
"He is among the most dangerous individuals this
forensic psychiatrist has evaluated," Dr. Seth Silverman wrote after
examining Martinez to determine his competency to waive appeals. "He
has taken pride in his short temper and proclivity to extreme
violence. The violence has escalated through his life, including
during his incarceration. ... Mr. Martinez's decision to refuse his
death penalty appeal is a logical extension of his lifelong
disrespect of his own, as well as others' physical well-being."
Martinez, in the death row interview, affirmed
that he likely would kill again. "Maybe not now," he said, "maybe
not in 10 years. But someday, maybe 20 years from now, somebody
would set me off. I give my life freely." Psychologist Carmen
Petzold found that Martinez suffered from "numerous disorders,"
possibly stemming from his hellish childhood. Born to a heroin
addict, Martinez was placed for adoption with a family in which he
was verbally, physically and, he claimed, sexually abused by his new
mother. Martinez told officials he was "beaten every night until my
mother's hands hurt and she had to stop."
'His life just fell apart'
Martinez's adoptive mother, Velma Griffin, who
raised the child from 15 months to nine years, when her marriage
ended in divorce, denied all the abuse allegations. Today, she prays
for him and hopes his life will be spared. She routinely attempts to
visit him on death row, though on each occasion he has rebuffed her,
silently returning to his cell when he determines the identity of
his visitor. "I feel very sad," she said. "I cry all the way home. I
have to sit in the car five to 10 minutes to compose myself. I just
wanted him to know that somebody loves him."
Griffin said Martinez's early years showed
promise — as a Boy Scout he was selected to address the Texas
Senate. But after the divorce, when she gave up custody of her four
children to her ex-husband, "his life just fell apart." Martinez
said the situation hardly improved when his adoptive father
remarried. His stepmother, he asserted, intensely disliked him and
worked to alienate his father. "She wouldn't do anything," he said.
"She'd wait until my dad came home, and he'd hit me hard."
Martinez's father, stepmother and siblings could not be located for
comment.
By the time Martinez dropped out of the ninth
grade, he was a steady inhaler of spray paint fumes and similar
substances. His adolescence and young adulthood were marked by
continual violent skirmishes — only during three years was he free
of the criminal-justice system, records show. "I always looked at it
like everybody owed me something," Martinez said. "My mentality was
not giving a damn. I couldn't see myself in the world for some
reason. I was mad all the time. ... I always thought that I could go
right someday. I always thought that things would work out for the
best. And all the time I was getting further in the hole."
Deadly trail
In 1994, he stabbed a co-worker during an
altercation at the pizza restaurant at which they worked, resulting
in a seven-year sentence for attempted murder. He had been out of
prison three weeks when he murdered Oliveros, a 45-year-old
prostitute with a history of narcotics offenses. Martinez said he
contacted the escort service for which Oliveros worked. When
Oliveros arrived at Martinez's home — he was staying at Griffin's
residence — the two quarreled over the woman's $300 fee.
In three statements to police, Martinez
acknowledged that he had sex with the woman, then killed her. In one,
he admitted that he had taken money and cocaine from her belongings.
Martinez's county cellmate, Rios, who received a reduced sentence
for his testimony, told jurors the killer told him he had placed a
knife to the woman's throat as she gathered her things to leave,
engaged in sex, forced the knife into her throat, then, to silence
her, slashed her throat. He then placed the corpse in a bedroom
closet, retrieving it three days later to dump it in a nearby vacant
lot.
Prosecutors told jurors that to find Martinez
guilty of capital murder they could accept that he had robbed and/or
sexually assaulted his victim. It was not necessary that jurors
agree on which felony he committed. The court of criminal appeals
upheld prosecutors' interpretation of the law. In his death row
interview, Martinez said he took money and drugs in the incident,
but the theft was an afterthought, not a motivating factor. He
indicated the couple had engaged in consensual sex. Residents of a
well-kept South Houston neighborhood, where Oliveros apparently
lived with her parents, now deceased, would not comment on the
victim's descent into drug abuse and prostitution.
'Condemned forever'
On Aug. 23, 2001, Martinez slashed his
stepmother's throat in an unprovoked attack as his 8-year-old half-brother
and 12-year-old half-sister watched. The injured woman survived
after spending nine days in the hospital, five of them in intensive
care. Martinez was arrested later the same day after he confided his
crimes to a relative in La Porte, who notified police.
When police searched Martinez's bedroom the next
day, they found blood on the bed frame, wall, floor, closet shelves
and door. Some of the blood, said Assistant District Attorney Marie
Munier, was from Oliveros, some from Martinez. Because of
irregularities the Houston Police Department's crime lab, the blood
samples were tested a second time with the same results, she said.
Behind bars, Martinez seethed. He demanded to be
housed "with my people," members of the violent Mexican Mafia prison
gang. He denounced those who might have been sympathetic to him,
notably the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, for
failing to adequately champion his case.
And he wrote a letter to his adoptive mother: "I
have not decided what discipline I will give you, but it will be
severe," he said in the missive. " ... Wherever you go, I'll find
you. I pray you go straight to hell when you die because when I meet
you there, I will torture you for eternity, just as I am condemned
forever."
ProDeathPenalty.com
Alexander Martinez called Helen Joyce Oliveros, a
prostitute, and made arrangements for her to meet him at his house
on Aug. 12, 2001.
Martinez told the victim on the phone that he
would pay around $300 for her services.
On arriving at Martinez’s house, Oliveros began
discussing payment. Martinez argued about the amount and whether he
was going to pay.
When it became clear that Martinez either had no
money or was not going to pay her, a then angry Oliveros stated that
she was going to leave, and began packing her things.
Martinez stuck a knife against her neck and
pushed her back. He began to attempt to have sex with her while
holding the knife against her neck. The victim kicked Martinez away
but he managed to grab her and prevent her from leaving. He then
sliced her throat, causing her death. Martinez took $150 from the
victim.
On August 23, 2001, Oliveros’ nude body was found
stuffed inside two garbage bags in a Houston field.
Texas Execution Information
Center by David Carson
Alexander Rey Martinez, 29, was executed by
lethal injection on 7 June 2005 in Huntsville, Texas for the robbery
and murder of a 45-year-old woman.
On 12 August 2001, Martinez, then 25, telephoned
an escort agency and arranged for a woman to meet him at his Houston
home. When Helen Oliveros arrived, she asked Martinez for the $300
he had agreed to pay. Martinez argued about the amount and whether
he was going to pay. Oliveros then stated that she was going to
leave, and began gathering her things.
Martinez then put a knife to
Oliveros' neck and had sex with her. Martinez then cut Oliveros'
throat, and she died. Martinez then took $150 and some drugs from
the victim. He hid the body in a closet for three days, then dumped
it in a field.
On 23 August, Martinez attacked his stepmother,
Maria Martinez, slashing her throat. She survived after spending
nine days in the hospital. Alexander was arrested later that day
after a relative he confided in notified the police. While in
custody, Martinez confessed to killing Oliveros. Her body - nude and
stuffed inside garbage bags - was found that day.
While awaiting trial, Martinez, who had extensive
tatoos on his arms and torso, had two more added to his arms. They
were tombstones bearing the names of his victims. Maria's tombstone
read "To be continued." Oliveros' read "$300" and "R.I.P."
Martinez had numerous prior convictions and had
been in and out of jail and prison since the age of 15. In August
1994, he was convicted of attempted murder for stabbing a worker at
a pizza restaurant. He was sentenced to 7 years in prison.
He served
approximately one year before being paroled in August 1995. He was
back behind bars a month later, on a felony theft conviction. He was
paroled again on the attempted murder sentence in July 2001. He
killed Oliveros 23 days later.
A jury convicted Martinez of capital murder in
December 2002 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in March 2004.
In August 2004, Martinez waived his remaining appeals. "Yeah, I
believe in violence," Martinez said in an interview from death row
at the Polunsky Unit in Livingston. "I was raised up with violence.
I was hit, kicked, hollered at. It destroyed my family. Even in here,
I'm subject to violence. Even the state will be violent when I'm
killed."
Martinez also admitted that he would probably kill again if
he were freed. "Maybe not now, maybe not in ten years. But someday,
maybe twenty years from now, somebody would set me off."
Martinez was adopted when he was 15 months old.
He said that his adoptive mother, Velma Griffin, who raised him for
the next 7½ years, sexually abused him and beat him "every night
until [her] hands hurt and she had to stop."
While on death row, Martinez wrote Griffin a
letter, in which he stated, "I have not decided what discipline I
will give you, but it will be severe ... Wherever you go, I'll find
you. I pray you go straight to Hell when you die, because when I
meet you there, I will torture you for eternity, just as I am
condemned forever." Griffin denied Martinez' allegations. She
repeatedly attempted to visit him on death row, but he refused to
see her.
When Martinez waived his appeals last August, he
received a March 2005 execution date. That date was put off, however,
when his lawyer filed an appeal against his wishes. "You should have
heard him," attorney Pat McCann said. "He was furious." In the
interview, Martinez admitted that he killed Oliveros. "I didn't have
$300," he said. "She got real mad, and we got into a fight. I
stabbed her." "I don't like what I did," Martinez said. "I'm ashamed
for what I did."
On the afternoon of his execution, while he was
waiting in the holding cell next to the death chamber, Martinez
prepared a handwritten statement. "I have caused so much pain to so
many people," he wrote. "I especially want to apologize to my
victim's family for the life I took ... I am ashamed for what I've
done!"
In his last statement, Martinez thanked his
family and friends and expressed his love for them. He added, "and
thanks for the friends at the Polunsky Unit that helped me get
through this that didn't agree with my decision and still gave me
their friendship." The lethal injection was started, and Martinez
was pronounced dead at 6:18 p.m.
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
Alexander Martinez - TEXAS - June 7, 2005 6:00
p.m. CST
On June 7, 2005, the state of Texas is scheduled
to execute Alexander Martinez, a 28-year-old Latino man, for the
August 2001 murder of a 45-year-old white woman in Harris County.
Martinez stabbed the prostitute to death on
August 12, 2001 in the city of Houston. He does not deny
responsibility for the murder nor attempt to justify his actions.
Instead, he expresses deep regret and remorse. “There was no
justification for what I did,” says Martinez, “I am ashamed for what
I did and I am a firm believer that actions speak louder than words.”
Martinez was convicted of first-degree murder on
December 6, 2002 and sentenced to death. His conviction and sentence
were affirmed on mandatory direct appeal.
At a hearing on May 20, 2004, Martinez waived his
right to all further appeals. In a recent letter in which he
attempted to offer an explanation as to why he chose to forego his
appeals, Martinez stated, “I don’t want to be what I have come to be
in this life. I don’t want to simply exist in this life. I want to
live a life where I have free will and choices to make for myself.”
He further remarks, “I have nothing to live for.”
Martinez’s desire to be executed appears to be
fueled by feelings of despair and hopelessness. By permitting
Martinez’s execution to proceed, Texas may very well be merely
assisting in the suicide of a depressed individual. Please contact
Gov. Rick Perry and express your conviction that Martinez's life
should be spared.
Killer executed in death of prostitute
Dallas Morning News
Tuesday, June 7, 2005
HUNTSVILLE – Condemned killer Alexander Martinez
was executed Tuesday for the robbery and fatal stabbing of a
prostitute at a Houston house almost four years ago.
In a brief statement while strapped to the death
chamber gurney, he thanked his family and friends and expressed his
love for them. "And thanks for the friends at the Polunsky Unit that
helped me get through this that didn't agree with my decision and
still gave me their friendship," he said. Martinez, who would have
turned 29 next week, ordered no appeals filed that could stop his
punishment.
As the drugs began flowing, he gasped, coughed
and let out a long wheeze. Eight minutes later at 6:18 p.m., he was
pronounced dead. One of the tubes carrying the lethal drugs snaked
around his right arm where there was a large tattoo of a woman with
long flowing hair. Just beneath her image was a tombstone with a
large dollar sign.
In a handwritten statement he prepared about two
hours before his death, Martinez acknowledged that "I have caused so
much pain to so many people. I especially want to apologize to my
victim's family for the life I took. "I am only taking full
responsibility for what I have done. I am truly sorry and, though
some may not believe this, God only knows the truth and for that I
know that's all that matters. I am ashamed for what I've done!"
His English-born wife by proxy and a
sister-in-law were the only witnesses.
His execution was the ninth this year in Texas,
the nation's leading capital punishment state. "I don't like what I
did," Martinez said in a recent death row interview. "I'm ashamed
for what I did. I can say I'm sorry, but my actions mean so much
more."
Martinez was supposed to be put to death in
March. That date was put off, however, when his lawyer filed an
appeal in the state courts against Martinez's wishes. "You should
have heard him," attorney Pat McCann said. "He was furious." When
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed the appeal, it cleared
the way for setting the punishment for Tuesday.
At least two psychiatrists examined Martinez last
year and determined he was mentally competent to make the decision.
"I think he actually looks at this execution as peace if one can
understand that," McCann said. "The system up there is so grim, some
of them actually long for some kind of release."
The eighth-grade dropout who said he never had a
real job was out of prison in August 2001 only three weeks on an
attempted murder conviction when he telephoned an escort service
that doubled as a prostitution operation. With a promise she would
be paid $300, Helen Oliveros, 45, showed up at the Houston house
where Martinez was staying. "I didn't have $300," he said. "She got
real mad and we got into a fight. I stabbed her."
Evidence showed he slit the woman's throat with a
knife, had sex with her and took about $150 from her. Then he folded
her body into a trash bag and stuffed it in a closet. After a few
days, he dumped the body in a nearby vacant field on Houston's east
side.
He later attacked his stepmother, seriously
injuring her by slashing her throat. When he told other relatives of
that assault, they became afraid and called police. Prosecutors said
he then confessed to the Oliveros slaying.
Martinez had been in and out of jail and prison
since he was 15, when he was first arrested for stealing cars. In
August 1994 he was convicted of attempted murder in Houston for
stabbing a worker at a pizza place and was sentenced to seven years.
A year later he was paroled, then returned to prison the following
year for violating parole. On July 20, 2001, Martinez was freed
under mandatory supervision. Oliveros was killed 23 days later.
Her name, along with the name of Martinez's
stepmother, are on tombstones among extensive tattoos on his arms.
"He did it before the trial," said Marie Munier, a Harris County
assistant district attorney who was among the prosecutors handling
Martinez's case. "One gave us the name of the complainant and said
$300 and R.I.P. "He was really creepy."
At least six other Texas inmates have execution
dates. Scheduled next for injection is Charles Dean Hood, set to die
June 30 for the fatal shootings of a man and woman in Plano in 1989.
Texas executes man for 2001 murder
Reuters News
Jun 7, 2005
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (Reuters) - Texas executed a
28-year man on Tuesday who halted all legal appeals and volunteered
for lethal injection for the 2001 murder of a prostitute in Houston.
Alexander Martinez, 28, was convicted of stabbing to death 45-year-old
Helen Oliveros after arguing with her about a $300 payment. Martinez
slit her throat and sexually assaulted her. He later dumped her body
in a vacant lot.
Martinez was the ninth person executed this year
in Texas. He had previously served a prison sentence for attempted
murder of a restaurant worker.
Martinez confessed to killing Oliveros after he
was arrested in 2001 for slitting his stepmother's throat. His
stepmother survived the attack.
Statistics show an increasing number of death row
inmates in the United States are seeking to halt the automatic
appeals that accompany their death sentences and often take years to
complete. Of the nearly 1,000 people executed in the last three
decades, one in eight asked for their appeals to be dropped,
although last year the rate rose to one in six. Experts have cited
increasing tough living conditions in prison where the death row
inmates are kept in constant isolation as a possible reason for the
increase in "volunteers" for the death chamber.
Martinez was the 345th person put to death in
Texas since the state resumed capital punishment in 1982, six years
after the U.S. Supreme Court lifted a national death penalty ban, a
total that leads the nation.
For his final meal, Martinez requested a
cheeseburger, scrambled eggs, mashed potatoes with gravy, bacon,
orange juice, fried steak, a fried pork chop, onion rings, french
fries, a quarter fried chicken and a bowl of shredded cheese.
In a letter written by Martinez released by Texas
prison officials, he took responsibility for the killing and
apologized to his victim's family. "I would like to say though many
disapproved of my decision in waiving my appeals, I have caused much
pain to so many people," he wrote. None of the victim's family
attended the execution, although Martinez's wife and sister-in-law
were present.
Texas has six more executions scheduled this year.
Prostitute's killer welcomes execution this week
Condemned prisoner Alexander Martinez didn't plan on living this
long
Houston Chronicle
Associated Press - June 6, 2005
LIVINGSTON — Hoping to die back in March, the
Houston man had his execution date canceled after his lawyer filed
an appeal to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. "Really just a
waste of my time," Martinez said recently from death row at the
Texas Department of Criminal Justice Polunsky Unit outside
Livingston, where he's been locked in a cell 23 hours a day for
almost the past 2 1/2 years. "There are guys here who deserve a
second chance, a third chance. I accept what's happening."
Martinez, who would turn 29 next week, is
volunteering Tuesday evening to be the ninth Texas inmate put to
death this year. He demanded no additional appeals be filed to try
to stop his punishment in Huntsville for the August 2001 robbery and
fatal stabbing of Helen Oliveros, a 45-year-old prostitute. "I just
want to say there's no justification for what I did," said Martinez,
who would turn 29 next week. "I feel I should have a choice, and I'm
making my choice."
"He's genuinely been driving this train for the
last six months and was not happy when it was postponed before," his
lawyer, Pat McCann, said Monday. "I suppose one can imagine a
situation where death is preferable to the life you have, and I
suppose that's where he is."
Martinez, an eighth-grade dropout who said he
never had a job, was out of prison only three weeks on an attempted
murder conviction when he telephoned an escort service that was a
front for prostitutes. They discussed payment and he said he agreed
to $300. Oliveros then showed up at the Houston house where he was
staying. "I didn't have $300," he said. "She got real mad and we got
into a fight. I stabbed her."
Evidence showed he slit the woman's throat with a
knife, had sex with her after she was dead and took about $150 from
her. Then he folded her body into a trash bag and stuffed it in a
closet. "I didn't feel anything at first," he said. "Two, three days
later, it started bothering me."
He took the body to a nearby vacant field and
dumped it. His brother later would testify about how he helped
Martinez replace the carpet in the room where the slaying occurred
because it was stained and smelled bad. "I regret I made that call,"
Martinez said, insisting it was the first time he had sought the
services of a prostitute. "I was sort of curious."
Marie Munier, a Harris County assistant district
attorney who helped prosecute Martinez, said he later slit the
throat of his stepmother, who would survive her wounds, then went to
another relative's house where he reported he had "done something
bad," she said. Those relatives were afraid and called police, and
he was linked to the Oliveros slaying. "He gives pretty much a full
confession," Munier said.
Martinez said he had been in and out of jail and
prison since he was 15 when he first was arrested for stealing cars.
In August 1994 he was convicted of attempted murder in Houston for
stabbing a worker at a pizza place and was sentenced to seven years.
A year later he was paroled, then returned to prison the following
year for violating parole.
On July 20, 2001, he was freed under mandatory
supervision. Oliveros, whose name is on a tattoo of a tombstone on
Martinez's arm, was killed 23 days later. "There's a feeling of
anticipation that this is it," Martinez, from inside a tiny death
row visiting cage, said of his decision to accelerate his death. "There
ain't no turning back, the finality of it. "You wonder what's past
this. I'm going to find out."
At least six other Texas inmates have execution
dates, including another this month. Charles Dean Hood is set to die
June 30 for the fatal shootings of a man and woman in the Dallas
suburb of Plano in 1989.
Texas Carries Out Ninth Execution Of 2005
KWTX-TV
June 7, 2005
Convicted killer Alexander Martinez was put to
death just after 6 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas death chamber in
Huntsville. He had no appeals pending Tuesday as Texas prison
officials prepared for the execution.
Martinez was sentenced to die for the 2001
robbery and stabbing death of a 45-year-old prostitute in Houston.
Martinez had been out of prison for only three
weeks after serving a sentence for attempted murder when he called
an escort service that served as a front for prostitutes,
authorities said. He agreed to pay $300 and later Oliveros arrived
at the house in Houston where he was staying, authorities said. He
didn’t have the money, though, and the two got into a fight, during
which Oliveros was stabbed to death.
Records show Martinez had been in and out of jail
and prison since he was 15 when he first was arrested for stealing
cars. He was convicted in 1994 of attempted murder in Houston for
stabbing a worker at a pizza place and was sentenced to seven years
behind bars. Martinez was paroled one year later, and then was
returned to prison the following year for violating parole.
He was the ninth inmate to be executed so far
this year in Texas. Another execution is scheduled later this month.
FreeNet
Alexander Martinez #999438
Polunsky Unit D.R.
3872 FM 350 South
Livingston - Texas 77351 U.S.A.
EXECUTION SCHEDULED for March 10, 2005 Alexander
gives up ...
Introduction
I extend there warm greetings to you. I hope you
will take a moment to read my thoughts I wish to share with you in
this introduction... My name is Alexander Rey Martinez. I'm 27 years
of age, born June 16.1976- Mexican-American.
I have been on the row for a year now and
although my fate of death I await for the appeal process to run its
curie witnessing my fellow human beings around me be put to death, a
reality of life and death. People whom you knew that are no longer
living in the physical form - knowing each human being put to death
is a step closer to your own.
Many people on the row handle this reality in
many ways and some can't handle it. I choose to reach out to people
and establish a form of friendship exchanging thoughts and giving
companionship. I enjoy writing and have always enjoyed corresponding
with friends. I also express myself in articles ways as well with
poetry.
In me reaching out to you I'm interested in
forming a to the end friendship bond. Someone who also enjoys
writing, open minded, un-judgemental and out going personality. One
who loves to explore, not only what’s surrounding them, but also
beyond them as well.
To fully understand ones true existence, is to
explore all aspects in life. Which I must express me being on death
row how made me really reach within myself and creek for real me and
my true existence in this world. I learn more about life through
experiencing and sharing myself with whom I meet. For I have learned
in each of us we have a part of each other within ourselves living.
I wish to find that part of me in you. I work to give me the chance
to do so as I reach out from my confines.
I'm not guaranteed a long life not even 6 years,
but I do not worry about that at the moment because no matter what
the outcome of my appeal is, I know I live forever in the hearts of
my friends who has given me the chance to find another part of
myself in them and to live through them as each friend lives through
me.
Alexander Martinez - January 2004
By: Alexander M. 1-25-04
" Treasure Hidden Within "
February is a month where most people express
their love to one other on a day, widely known as Valentine's Day. I
don't have a sweetheart or some one I'm intimate with, but I don't
think Valentine's Day is just for the lovers but for the feeling of
love we have for one other. Either it be a sweetheart, a family
member or a friend.
Well, I have a story I would love to share with
you all. I don't think it's a story, story, but its experience I
went through.
I was close to my Grandparents, especially my
Grandma. The only one who let me stay up as late as I wanted too;
who still had the classic cookie jar filled with cookies she made;
and one woman who will holds the title of: " Worlds Best Cook! "
Oh, my Grandma could cook anything! She was a
tall woman, strong minded, and strong willed. My Grandfather in the
other hand was a short and stocky man, a very hard worker and
dedicated to his family. My Grandparents were married many years and
never did their love falter all them years. Truly a match made in
heaven. What I refer as soulmates!
As we all show life here in the physical world
doesn't live forever. For all things must come to an end. I lost my
Grandfather in 1999 to an illness that befalled him and my
Grandmother in 2001 to an illness that also befalled her. When my
Grandfather passed away my Grandmother lost her will to live. She
loved her husband so much she would cry for him. These years at the
time I was incarcerated and couldn't be there for them.
However, I was able to speak with my Grandma a
week before she passed. I was allowed to call and only for 5 minutes
and she cried the whole time telling me she was sorry for not coming
down to visit (that week she was approve to visit) me and how much
she missed me and wanted to hug me. A week later she passed away.
I was always guaranteed to get a card from my
Grandma on every holiday. If no one else sent me a card, I would get
one from Grandma. The last card I received from her was a
Valentine's Day card. I hated myself for not being there for her. I
was feeling very empty and down. One night I had a very vivid and
real dream, though it was not a dream. I remember standing inside
this beautiful building and I was told I would see my Grandma. I
waited anxiously for her. We embraced and I remember crying telling
her I was sorry, I missed you and Love you very much! She just
hugged me and said: " I know, I know!" Then she said to me: " Look,
there's something for you!" "What is it, I said!"" You have to find
it, look for it!" For all she said. With that, I awoke and I
couldn’t believe what just happened to me. Everything was so real!
Over the next few years I spent wondering, what
she meant by: there's something for me? Was it some hidden treasure,
a gift or something? I felt a lot better after that experience. I
finely had the chance to see her and tell her how much I loved her.
Though, I was bothered by the hint she gave me. How come she
couldn't just tell me what is it I needed to find?
What I have learned in these years is that we all
live on and what keeps this alive is our love. To spiritually grow,
and become aware is to experience all tribulations in life for
ourselves. Therefore we learn our strengths and weaknesses.
Though it was the last card I received from my
Grandma, it was specifically meant to be the last card and at that,
a Valentine's Day card. A symbolic meaning to show me how powerful
our love can be, that nothing can stop it, not even death. That
loves lives on.
I know now what she meant by "there's something
for you, you have to find it!" I was very confused and lost about
life at that point in my life. It all came together like a puzzle
and it was for me to put it together and solve it. No one can solve
our problems but ourselves. I was right. It was a Treasure, it was
hidden within myself.
So every Valentines Day I celebrate my
Grandparents dedicated love and the love they shared with me. Not
only their love I celebrate, but all who have sincerely shared their
love with me. I encourage you all to reach out this Valentines Day
to those around you and especially the special loved ones who have
came into our lives who helped us solve the puzzle of who we truly
are and the purpose for our existence, who helped us reveal the
hidden treasure within ourselves.
Dedicated to My Grandparents: Gloria & Jesse
Chavez
CellPals.com
Hello and most pleasant greetings to you. Thank
you for visiting my exquisite website and hope that we can come to
know each other, if you so wish.
My name is Alexander Martinez, 23 years of age,
Mexican American and presently incarcerated in Texas. I'm 5'4" and
165 lbs., A medium thickset physique, dark brown eyes, jet black
wavey hair, bronze color skin. My predominate hobbies are advance
artisan, writing, writing poetry, chess and reading various books to
occupy the mind, just as well to educate it. Other hobbies that I
enjoy doing, but restricted from are: ceramics, sculpturing, fishing,
camping and raising small domestic animals. I love all animals that
don't attack. My favorite color is aquamarine. I'm not looking for a
particular individual to correspond with, just a mature being of all
ages, nationalities and gender. I'm a peculiar, unique individual
that loves to express myself with words and in artistry ways. My
days are short and would like to meet those that enjoy to write, for
it is a soothing way to express one self. Students or any
individuals that have questions or curious of prison life, feel free
to ask. All letters will be answered. As I close, may you have a
pleasant evening and exit safely....Alexander Martinez
Martinez v. State,
129 S.W.3d 101 (Tex.Crim.App. 2004) (Direct Appeal).
Background: Defendant was convicted in the trial
court, Harris County, Susan Brown, J., of capital murder, and was
sentenced to death. Defendant appealed.
Holdings: The Court of Criminal Appeals, Keasler,
J., held that:
(1) state's jury argument permitting jury to find defendant
committed either of underlying offenses did not violate unanimity
requirement, and
(2) legally and factually sufficient evidence supported finding of
murder committed in course of aggravated sexual assault, as required
to support defendant's conviction. Affirmed.
KEASLER, J., delivered the opinion for a
unanimous Court.
Alexander Rey Martinez was convicted in December 2002 of capital
murder. [FN1] Pursuant to the jury's answers to the special issues
set forth in Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 37.071, §§
2(b) and 2(e), the trial judge sentenced Martinez to death. [FN2]
Direct appeal to this Court is automatic. [FN3] Martinez raises five
points of error challenging his conviction. We reject his
contentions and affirm.
FN1. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.03(a).
FN2. Art. 37.071 § 2(g). Unless otherwise
indicated, all references to Articles refer to the Texas Code of
Criminal Procedure.
FN3. Art. 37.071 § 2(h).
In his first point of error, Martinez claims the
trial court erred in overruling his objection to the State's jury
argument at guilt or innocence that the jurors need not agree on
which underlying offense appellant committed, either robbery or
aggravated sexual assault. The indictment charged Martinez with the
alternative theories of murder committed in the course of committing
and attempting to commit robbery, and murder committed in the course
of committing and attempting to commit aggravated sexual assault.
The jury charge permitted the jury to find appellant committed
either of the underlying offenses. The prosecutor argued in closing
that "as long as you 12 people agree that he's guilty of capital
murder, you need not all agree ... which felony he's committed."
When an indictment alleges differing methods of
committing capital murder in the conjunctive, the jury may properly
be charged in the disjunctive. [FN4] Martinez concedes the existence
of this precedent, but argues that allowing the jury to be split on
which theory supports the verdict runs afoul of the unanimity
requirement in Article 36.29(a) and defeats the purpose of the
specific provisions for capital murder within Penal Code §
19.03(a)(2)
The unanimity requirement is not violated by
instructing the jury on alternative theories of committing the same
offense, in contrast to instructing the jury on two separate
offenses involving separate incidents. [FN5] Jury argument referring
to a point of law that is properly contained within the charge is
permissible. Point of error one is overruled.
FN5. See Francis v. State, 36 S.W.3d 121, 124 (Tex.Crim.App.2000)
In points of error four and five, Martinez claims
the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his
conviction for capital murder in that the State failed to prove
aggravated sexual assault beyond a reasonable doubt. Martinez
concedes that he murdered the victim, but claims that the only
evidence supporting a finding that he committed the murder in the
course of committing or attempting to commit aggravated sexual
assault came from a "jail snitch" who was not worthy of belief.
Martinez gave three different versions of the
offense to police. In his first confession, videotaped on August 23,
2001, he stated that he arranged a meeting with the victim, a
prostitute, on the phone. He agreed to the victim's price of over
two hundred dollars, but he "told her that just to get her there."
He stated that he really planned on trying "to get it for free." He
stated that he met the victim at a mall and they got into her car
and began driving. When he attempted to negotiate the price with the
victim as they were driving, she became upset. Martinez told the
victim to pull over so he could use the phone and when she stopped,
he dragged her out of the car and cut her throat with a knife. He
said he killed her because he did not like the way she was talking
to him. He did not mention anything about sexual contact with the
victim.
Martinez gave a written statement the following
day. This statement was largely consistent with the first statement
except that he also stated that he took $150.00 in cash and some
cocaine from the victim after he killed her. He reiterated that he
agreed to the price for the victim's services on the phone but
stated again that he "never intended to pay her that much money." He
stated that he "didn't have any money at all." Again, he did not
mention sexual contact with the victim.
In a third interview Martinez admitted to killing
the victim in his room at his mother's house. He stated that he had
not been truthful about where he killed the victim because he was
trying to protect his mother. In this interview, most of which was
taped, Martinez stated that he had sex with the victim before
stabbing her and that the victim "complied" with the sex. He also
stated, however, that he did not pay her and never intended on
paying her. He said he stabbed the victim when she "started
tripping" about the money. She wanted to be paid around three
hundred dollars and when Martinez told her he would not pay her, the
victim started to leave. He said he grabbed her and "put the knife
to her."
Cesar Rios, a cell mate of Martinez's at the
Harris County Jail, testified for the State. Rios acknowledged his
own pending criminal charges for unauthorized use of a motor vehicle
and aggravated assault. Because he was a "habitual offender" Rios
stated that the punishment range for the offenses was two to twenty
years and twenty-five to ninety-nine years or life, respectively.
Rios testified that could not read and write and that he did not
learn any of the facts of the case from any source other than
Martinez. Rios testified that Martinez told him about the offense
during the course of two different conversations. Martinez told Rios
that he contacted the victim through a phone number for an escort
service.
On the phone, he agreed to the victim's price of
$300 which would make her trip across town worthwhile. Martinez told
Rios that he really only had $30. Martinez explained that when the
victim arrived at his house she sat down on the floor in his room
and they began discussing money. The victim wanted the money first
and when it became apparent that Martinez did not have it, she got
mad and tried to leave. Martinez attempted to stall her, and she
again asked him to see the money. Martinez then said the victim "started
going off on him."
He told Rios that he had a knife in his pocket
and when she said she was leaving and started gathering her things,
Martinez put the knife to the side of her neck. He said she was
still sitting on the floor and he pushed her back. He then got on
top of the victim to have sex and pushed the knife into her neck.
According to Rios, Martinez told him he was "inside of" the victim
attempting to have sex with her when she kicked him off of her. The
victim was bleeding and began begging him not to kill her and to
call an ambulance. She told him that if he killed her, there would
be no one to take care of her dog.
Martinez told her to be quiet so as not to wake
the others in the house and tried to figure out how he could kill
her without making too much noise. He finally sliced across her
throat. After she was dead, Martinez put a towel over her sliced
throat and had sex with her. He told Martinez he also played with
sex toys he found in the victim's bag. When he was done, he stated
that he folded the victim up and put her in a trash bag. He kept the
body in his closet for about three days before disposing of the
victim and her things.
Martinez also described cleaning up his room
and replacing the carpet. At the end of his testimony, Rios stated
that the prosecutor had offered to drop the unauthorized use and
habitual criminal charges against him in exchange for his testimony,
the result being that Rios would plead to aggravated assault with a
punishment range of two to twenty years.
Other evidence was consistent with and
corroborated appellant's confessions and Rios' testimony. Houston
police officers testified that the blood spatters and stains found
in appellant's room were consistent with appellant's version that
the victim was stabbed while sitting on the floor next to his bed.
The victim's body was found in a trash bag at the vacant lot where
appellant stated he had taken it. The condition of the body and the
way in which it was wrapped was consistent with appellant's
descriptions.
Appellant's brother testified that he had assisted
appellant in replacing the carpet in appellant's room. He described
the stains on the carpet and also described an unpleasant odor in
appellant's room. Finally, the medical examiner testified that
although the victim's body was in an advanced state of decomposition
when found and was partially "skeletonized," he nonetheless
concluded that stabbing to the neck was the cause of death based on
hemorrhage in the neck area and cutting lesions to the bones in the
neck.
We review the legal sufficiency of the evidence
in the light most favorable to the verdict to determine whether any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. [FN6] Viewing the evidence in a
light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence shows that
Martinez called the victim, a prostitute, and made arrangements for
her to meet him at his house.
Martinez told the victim on the phone
that he would pay around $300.00 for her services, although he did
not intend to pay her anything and had little or no money. Martinez
put a knife in his pocket before the victim arrived. The victim
began discussing payment immediately upon arrival. Martinez argued
about the amount and whether or not he was going to pay. When it
became clear that Martinez either had no money or was not going to
pay her, the victim became angry, stated that she was going to leave,
and began packing her things. Martinez stuck his knife against her
neck and pushed her back. He began to attempt sex with her while
holding the knife against her neck. The victim kicked Martinez away
but he managed to grab her and prevent her from leaving. He then
sliced her throat, causing her death. This evidence is legally
sufficient to support a finding of murder committed in the course of
aggravated sexual assault or attempted aggravated sexual assault
beyond a reasonable doubt.
FN6. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct.
2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979).
Martinez claims the evidence is factually
insufficient to prove aggravated sexual assault for the same reasons
he claims it is legally insufficient. Specifically, he argues that
Rios' testimony is the only evidence of sexual assault and that Rios
is not credible or worthy of belief. Martinez points to his
confessions in which he stated that he killed the victim because of
the way she was talking to him and being disrespectful. He argues
that because the victim was a prostitute, the interaction between
the victim and Martinez was consensual.
Evidence is factually insufficient if, viewing
all of the evidence in a neutral light, "the proof of guilt is so
obviously weak as to undermine confidence in the jury's
determination, or the proof of guilt, although adequate if taken
alone, is greatly outweighed by contrary proof." [FN7] Although a
reviewing court is authorized to disagree with the jury's
determination, due deference must be given to the fact finder's
determinations concerning the weight and credibility of the evidence
and reversal of the fact finder's determination is appropriate only
to prevent the occurrence of a manifest injustice. [FN8]
FN7. Johnson v. State, 23 S.W.3d 1, 11 (Tex.Crim.App.2000)
FN8. Swearingen v. State, 101 S.W.3d 89, 97 (Tex.Crim.App.2003)
Deferring to the jury's assessment of weight and
credibility, Rios' version is believable and is not inconsistent
with Martinez's statements. Martinez said nothing about sexual
contact in his first two statements. In his third statement,
Martinez's comment that the victim "complied" with him could
reasonably be interpreted as meaning that the victim did not
struggle or fight him as he held her at knifepoint.
Moreover,
Martinez's theory that the victim had consensual sex with him and
then brought up the issue of payment is less believable than Rios'
version, considering that the victim had already discussed payment
on the phone, was driving a long way across town to Martinez's house,
and was conducting a business transaction. Given the discussion
between appellant and the victim concerning payment, it would be
reasonable to conclude that the victim would have acted in her best
interest by obtaining the payment up front.
In addition, the level
of detail described by Rios and the consistency between Rios'
testimony and certain facts described in Martinez's statements and
the testimony of other witnesses, lend credibility to Rios'
testimony. Considering these factors, the proof of aggravated sexual
assault is not so obviously weak as to undermine confidence in the
jury's determination, nor is the proof of an aggravated sexual
assault greatly outweighed by contrary proof. Points of error four
and five are overruled.
In his second and third points of error, Martinez
claims the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support
his conviction for capital murder in that the State failed to prove
robbery beyond a reasonable doubt. In a capital murder case, when
the charge authorizes the jury to convict on more than one theory, a
guilty verdict will be upheld if the evidence is sufficient on any
one of the theories.
The indictment alleged that Martinez committed
murder in the course of committing or attempting to commit robbery
and in the course of committing or attempting to commit aggravated
sexual assault. The jury charge authorized conviction on either
theory. Because the evidence is legally and factually sufficient on
the theory of murder committed in the course of aggravated sexual
assault, we will not address the alternatively charged theory of
murder committed in the course of a robbery. Points of error two and
three are overruled.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Ex parte Alexander Rey
MARTINEZ, WR-61844-01 (Tex.Crim.App. April
13, 2005) (Waiver of Appeals)
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
Habeas Corpus Application from Harris County.
ORDER
PER CURIAM.
This is an application for writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to
the provisions of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Article
11.071.
On December 6, 2002, applicant was convicted of
the offense of capital murder. Punishment was assessed at death. On
March 3, 2004, this Court affirmed applicant's conviction on direct
appeal. Martinez v. State, 129 S.W.2d 101 (Tex.Crim.App.2004). This
application was timely filed on February 27, 2004.
On May 20, 2004, in response to letters applicant
sent to the judge of the convicting court, a hearing was held in
which applicant, in the presence of counsel, freely, knowingly, and
voluntarily waived any further proceedings in his case. Applicant
was examined by a psychiatrist and a psychologist and found
competent to waive review of his conviction by way of this instant
action.
The convicting court has entered findings of fact
and conclusions of law and found applicant is competent to withdraw
his habeas corpus application. We find the convicting court's
findings and conclusions are supported by the record and accordingly
dismiss the instant action.